Services and Information at SNEAKERSIWORLD.COM
, SNEAKERS – sneaker | ||
low carb, gourmet foods, Gourmet food, click here, food store | ||
please call, your hosting, free snood, game from, cactus bruce | ||
1
|
| John Squire | |
|---|---|
| Born | November 24 1962 Broadheath, Altrincham, England |
| Genre(s) | Alternative rock, Madchester |
| Instrument(s) | Guitar, Vocals |
| Years active | 1984 - 2007 |
| Label(s) | Silvertone, Geffen |
| Associated acts | The Stone Roses The Seahorses |
| Website | www.johnsquire.com |
| Notable instrument(s) | |
| 1964 Gretsch Chet Atkins Country Gentleman (Walnut) Hofner T4S (Custom Jackson Pollock Paintjob) 1960 Fender Stratocaster (Pink) Gibson Les Paul Fender Jaguar Custom built by Stuart Palmer (Two models built, one in white, one in sunburst | |
John Squire (born John Thomas Squire on 24 November, 1962) is an artist and retired guitarist. He was also a well respected English songwriter.
Squire is best known as a member of The Stone Roses, a rock band in which he formed a songwriting partnership with Ian Brown. After leaving The Stone Roses he went on to found The Seahorses and has since released two solo albums. Squire is also an accomplished painter and recently announced that he was giving up music for good to fully commit to painting.Roses legend gives up music - Arts - Entertainment - Manchester Evening News. Retrieved on September 15, 2007.
As a contemporary of Johnny Marr of The Smiths, Squire was amongst the most accomplished British rock guitarists of the 1980s, known for his chiming melodies, spiraling riffs and live solos.YouTube - John Squire shredding on his guitar!
Contents |
Squire was born in Broadheath, Altrincham, near Manchester, England. He grew up on Sylvan Avenue in Timperley and after attending Heyes Lane Junior School, he passed the eleven plus exam and went on to attend Altrincham Grammar School for Boys, where he met Ian Brown. They formed a close friendship during their teens, bonding over a shared love for punk rock.
In the early 1980s Squire and Brown founded a rock band that eventually became The Stone Roses, with Squire as lead guitarist from 1984 to 1996. The partnership between Squire and Brown formed the heart of the band\'s lyrical and musical output.
The band became one of the most influential acts of its era. Their 1989 eponymous debut album quickly achieved the status of a classic in the UK, and topped NME\'s list of the Greatest British Albums of All Time. Squire co-wrote all of the tracks with Brown. The cover art was painted by Squire, it is a Jackson Pollock influenced piece containing references to the May 1968 riots in Paris.
By the mid-1990s the Roses were being hailed as pioneers of the Britpop movement. Squire displayed a vocal dislike of most of the bands, dismissing them as "Kensington art-wankers". The most notable exception was Oasis. Squire even made an appearance at their Knebworth concert, playing guitar on "Champagne Supernova" and a cover of "I Am the Walrus".
The band\'s second album, Second Coming (released in 1994), was mainly written by Squire. He has credits on all but one of the tracks, most of which credit him alone. The album\'s featured a heavier blues-rock sound, similar to Led Zeppelin.{{{ Second Coming > Review }}} The album was met with mixed reaction from fans, and shortly after band infighting and rumoured cocaine abuse led to his departure from the band on April Fool\'s Day 1996.
Picking three unknowns, Squire formed a new band, The Seahorses, in 1996. The band\'s only album Do it Yourself was released in 1997. The Seahorses disbanded due to creative differences in 1999. It has been pointed out that the band\'s name is an anagram of \'he hates roses\', but whether this was intentional is disputed. The word seahorses is also an anagram of the words rose ashes
Squire released his first solo album, Time Changes Everything in 2002. A concept album followed in 2004 entitled Marshall\'s House.
Besides music, Squire is also a well-known, published artist. His artwork has adorned album covers and promotional posters for his and the Stone Roses\' music. In the 1980s, Squire\'s artistic style was heavily influenced by the action painting technique of Jackson Pollock. In recent years, Squire has shown a broader use of mediums and has incorporated newer influences to his work. One of his artworks formed the cover for Travis\'s 1997 release U16 Girls. In 2004, Squire held two well-received art exhibitions in London and Manchester.
Over the past four years Squire has worked full time on his artwork which he has exhibited at The Smithfield Gallery (July 2007) and The Dazed Gallery, London (September - October 2007).
At the Smithfield Gallery opening, Squire told a reporter from the Manchester Evening News that he was giving up music for good. He explained that "I\'m enjoying this far too much to go back to music."Roses legend gives up music - Arts - Entertainment - Manchester Evening News. Retrieved on September 15, 2007. When asked about a Stone Roses reunion, he said it was "highly unlikely".Roses legend gives up music - Arts - Entertainment - Manchester Evening News. Retrieved on September 15, 2007.
Although it has been over a decade since he left the Stone Roses, Squire allegedly has a lasting feud with ex-bandmate Ian Brown, whom he has not spoken to since his departure from the Stone Roses. In a 2005 Q magazine article, Squire blasted Brown, claiming "When he (Brown) was stoned, he was at best a tuneless knob and at worst a paranoid mess" (this was in response to queries about what had gone wrong with the Second Coming recording sessions, and the state of Brown\'s vocal due to his cannabis intake). Although both Brown and Squire have performed Stone Roses songs in their solo gigs, a band reunion seems unlikely.
John Squire was interviewed in June 2007 by Dave Haslam on XFM Manchester radio and discussed his current work as an artist, and claimed that even if Ian Brown phoned him and suggested a Stone Roses reunion, he would turn the offer down.John Squire interview
Albums
Singles
Live Albums/EPs
| The Stone Roses | |
|---|---|
| Ian Brown · John Squire · Mani · Reni Pete Garner · Andy Couzens · Robbie Maddix · Aziz Ibrahim · Nigel Ippinson | |
| Studio albums | The Stone Roses · Second Coming |
| Singles | "So Young" · "Sally Cinnamon" · "Elephant Stone" · "Made Of Stone" · "She Bangs The Drums" · "Fools Gold/What The World Is Waiting For" · "One Love" · "I Wanna Be Adored" · "Waterfall" · "I Am The Resurrection" · "Love Spreads" · "Ten Storey Love Song" · "Begging You" · "Crimson Tonight" |
| Compilations | Turns into Stone · The Complete Stone Roses · Garage Flower · Remixes · The Very Best of The Stone Roses |
| Related articles | Discography · Madchester · Britpop · John Leckie · The Seahorses · Freebass |
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from Wikipedia